Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Staunton, May 18 – The recently-founded
Union of Russian Speaking Citizens of Tuva has appealed to Vladimir Putin to take
measures to protect their language rights and ensure their representation in
the organs of state power, given what they say is the conscious policy of the
Tuvan government to violate both.

The open letter of the Rossiyane
group, reported in today’s “Kommersant,” acknowledges that Russian-speaking
groups in Tuva, a category that includes ethnic Russians as well as some other
non-Tuvans, has declined from 37 percent at the end of Soviet times to only
eight percent today (kommersant.ru/doc/2989685).

And the letter continues: “In connection
with the mass departure of ethnic Russians, there has arisen a deficit in the
number of qualified cadres including doctors, engineers and teachers and
especially Russian language instructors [which] has led to Russian being taught
as a foreign language in the majority of schools of the republic.”

As a result, Zinaida Dekhtyar, a
former deputy of the Tuvan parliament and one of the authors of the appeal,
told the Moscow newspaper that “a significant portion of the population of the republic
has not mastered Russian” and that Tuvan sportsman who appear on Russian
television often speak through a translator.

That pattern, she insisted, “is an
indicator of the real state of affairs” in Tuva.

The letter to Putin also complains
about what its authors say is the discriminatory policy of the Tuvan government
in selecting administrative cadres: “In the republic, only one of the 17 heads
of district administrations is an ethnic Russian, and only three of the 37
members of the government itself are Russians.”

Moreover, it says, “even in the
organs of state power and social institutions, including the post office and
the police, the habit of using the state language [Russian] is disappearing.
And the authorities have slapped Russians in the face in another way by appointing
an activist of the Popular Front whom many blame for “the avalanche-like
outflow” of Russians in the 1990s.

The
authors call on the Russian president to “take measures to guarantee in Tuva to
people of all nationalities equality of rights, including appointments to
positions and access to the court system.”

The
Tuvan government “categorically” rejects these charges or any need for Moscow
to intervene. It points out that it has supported Russian-language education in
various way and worked to ensure that Russian is used in government offices and
with the population. And it insists there is thus no basis for complaints about
discrimination against Russian speakers.

But
the ethnic situation in Tuva is clearly becoming more tense, not only because
the share of ethnic Russians and Russian speakers in the republic’s population
has become so small but also because those Russians who remain feel threatened
and also feel that Moscow will intervene on their behalf.

Viktor
Molin, a Just Russia deputy in the Tuvan capital’s council, says that is
demonstrated by the fact that the Russian speakers have finally decided to get
organized, something they did not do earlier.

Another
local Russian speaker, Sergey Konviz of the opposition newspaper “Risk” agrees.
Clearly, he says, “the situation of the Russian-speaking population in the republic
has reached critical mass, for even in the 1990s when the main exodus of
population took place and there were inter-ethnic conflicts, such organizations
did not arise.”

“Now,
it is obvious that these people feel themselves quite uncomfortable” in Tuva, a
historically Buddhist nation of 300,000 on the border with Mongolia that is
unknown if at all for its remarkable stamps from its independent period and the
interest in it of the late American physicist Richard Feynman.